i have downloaded a scwm tarball a while ago. it was totally impossible to get the thing build with gcc 4.1. the last mail threads are from around 2002 or so, it does not seem to be maintained in any form anymore, hence there is also no debian binary for it, though it was. i played around with it for a week or so. i am not experienced enough to replace all the old libraries with new ones. of all scheme projects, which have been neglected, scwm is for sure the most interesting one - windowmanager for X, highly configurable through constaints...if you read through the manual, you can see how powerfull it actually could be. it is really a pity. would be a great excercise to rewrite it in guile, if you ask me...for now there is still sawfish, which works just great for me (who works anyway on the console most of the time...).

thanks for the links. i knew fluxus, but don't use it. (i barely use the gimp, which is custmizable with guile). how can i pay you now. maybe with other links?

that's exactly, what i like. i have downloaded and build the stuff, i think 0.92 or so (there is even a debian binary, but a veeery oooold one). however, i did it quick and dirty so it does not work perfectly. for example is all the other stuff i needed for it was from the debian repository, which means i could'nt build it with clisp (too old), only with sbcl and i don't know if the maintainer at debian's has compiled the sbcl package --with-threads and so on. but i really like it. it is like screen for the desktop. i use screen a lot on the terminal, actually all the time... so the little time i spent on the desktop to read manuals with gv or watch some stupid pictures, any window manager is o.k for me. don't have the time to play around with it now. for instance, if i start a gnome-terminal and watch pics with feh, then feh will not respond to my keystrokes et cetera et cetera. so i have to build all the nice lispy stuff from source (delete all debian binaries, download about 30 lisp applications and .....). after all, thanks a lot for the link!

Not 'applications' in the sense I meant, but with the web being used more and more for such things I think Hop, SISCweb, Beautiful Report Language and Roadsend PHP (implemented with Bigloo and C) deserve mention here as well.

HOP is a new Software Development Kit for the Web 2.0. It relies a new higher-order language for programming interactive web applications such as web agendas, web galleries, music players, etc. HOP can be viewed as a replacement for traditional graphical toolkits. HOP is implemented as a Web broker, i.e., a Web server that may act indifferently as a regular Web server or Web proxy.

SISCweb is a framework to facilitate writing stateful Scheme web applications in a J2EE environment.

By using continuations, SISCweb does away with the page-centric execution model typical of web programming. Every time the program sends a response to the browser, its state is suspended, to be then resumed from that exact point when the browser submits a request.

One implication of this approach is that local variables in scope when the response is sent will still be in scope when the subsequent request is received, making much of the session-object data shuffling needless. Another consequence is that, much like in console-based applications, the conversational state between client and server is constantly maintained -- hence the term "stateful."

SISCweb is implemented in SISC, a Scheme interpreter for the JVM with support for full continuations.

* Beautiful: It is easy to write BRL code that is understandable and maintainable, appealing to a programmer's sense of aesthetics.

* Report: BRL is particularly suitable for constructing output that is a mix of static and dynamic content, e.g. web pages, e-mail messages. Its greatest strength is constructing output from SQL databases.

* Language: The full power of a general-purpose programming language is there when needed. Simple examples are trivial uses of the language, but look more like templates than programming. The template system and programming language are more tightly integrated in BRL than in any other system.